Home Office

Reform of the Clandestine Entrant Civil Penalty Scheme

Robert Jenrick: This Government is determined to crack down on illegal migration, to dismantle the organised criminal gangs behind it and to keep our borders safe and secure. For over twenty years, we have run a scheme to help us to do just this – the Clandestine Entrant Civil Penalty Scheme. The Scheme is designed to complement law enforcement activity against criminals. It does this through tackling negligence by people who are not criminals but whose carelessness nonetheless means that they are responsible for a clandestine entrant gaining access to a vehicle. During the financial year 2020-2021, there were 3,145 incidents where clandestine entrants were detected concealed in vehicles, despite the Covid-19 pandemic causing a lower volume of traffic. This rose to 3,838 incidents during the financial year 2021-2022. The Government is therefore concerned that the Scheme is not having enough of an effect. Existing penalty levels have not changed since 2002. Drivers and other responsible persons are not taking the steps required to secure their vehicles, and clandestine entrants are continuing to use these routes to come to the UK. The Government committed to reform the Scheme in 2021, running a consultation in the summer of 2022. We are today publishing our response to that consultation, setting out plans to deliver what will be the first overhaul of the Scheme since 2002. Our reforms, including new penalty levels, have been designed to strike a better balance between disincentivising negligence and failures to comply with vehicle security standards, while ensuring that the regime is not overly burdensome on industry. We will now be commencing relevant parts of the Nationality and Borders Act 2022 and further commencing relevant parts of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 and the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002. We are also laying a statutory instrument to set out new security standards for all vehicles and to establish new maximum penalty levels. We are laying a new statutory code of practice to set out the circumstances in which a person might be eligible for a reduction in the level of their penalty. We are in addition publishing an economic note and an equality impact assessment. It is our intention, subject to the will of Parliament, for these reforms to take effect on Monday 13 February 2023. Between now and then, we will deliver a four-week period of engagement with drivers and industry, to make sure they know about the changes that are coming and to support compliance. The Government is committed to working with individuals and companies to support growth while delivering a strong and effective border. These reforms will help us to do just that. A copy of the consultation response and the economic note will be placed in the Libraries of both Houses. We are publishing further information on Gov.UK: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/clandestine-entrant-civil-penalty-scheme

Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities

Green Freeports in Scotland

Michael Gove: On 13 January, the UK and Scottish governments jointly announced that the Firth of Forth, and Inverness and Cromarty Firth have been successful in their bids to establish two new Green Freeports.Green Freeport status will support the creation of over 75,000 new, high-skilled jobs, drive growth and level up areas that have been previously overlooked. These areas will be backed by up to £52 million in UK Government funding, and potentially hundreds of millions in locally retained business rates, to upgrade local infrastructure and stimulate regeneration. This is alongside a generous package of trade and innovation support for businesses locating there.The Inverness and Cromarty Firth, and the Firth of Forth are excellent locations for these new Green Freeports, ensuring the benefits are felt right across Scotland. I wish to share my congratulations with the successful locations. Their strong bids demonstrated how they will regenerate their local communities, deliver decarbonisation, establish hubs for global trade and pioneer industries of the future.Freeports are at the vanguard of Levelling Up: driving growth, creating jobs and, in turn, transforming the communities that surround them. Green Freeports in Scotland will build on the UK Government’s successful Freeport programme in England, where all eight Freeports are open for business, with sites in Plymouth and South Devon, Solent, and Teesside, Liverpool, and the East of England, recently being granted final government approval. Green Freeports are a tangible example of what can be achieved and delivered when Scotland's two governments work together.This Government remains committed to ensuring that the whole of the UK can reap the benefits of our Freeports programme. We will be making a Freeports announcement relating to Wales shortly and we continue discussions with stakeholders in Northern Ireland about how best to deliver the benefits associated with Freeports there.